Correction from previous query

Thanks Ben and all experts.

I am almost a newbie to NoSQL world and thus I have a very general question
how does consumer application of Cassandra/other NoSQL technologies deal
with atomicity & other factors when there is need to *de-normalize *data.
For example:

Let us say I have requirement for queries
- find all hotels by name
- Find all hotels by Point of Interest (POI)
- Find POI near by a hotel

For these queries I would end up more or less in following tables
hotels_by_name(hotel_name,hotel_id,city,........) primary key - hotel_name
hotels_by_poi(poi_name,poi_id,hotel_id,hotel_name,......) primary key -
poi_name
poi_by_hotel(hotel_id,poi_name,poi_id,poi_loc,hotel_name,......) primary
key - hotel_id

So, If I have to add/remove a hotel from/into hotels_by_name , I may need
to add/remove into/from tables hotels_by_poi/poi_by_hotel. So, here my
assumption is these operations would need to be atomic( and may be
supporting other ACID properties) . How these kind of operations/usecases
being handled in Cassandra/NoSQL world?

Appreciate your response.

Thanks,
Rajesh

On Thu, Apr 26, 2018 at 8:05 AM, Rajesh Kishore <rajesh10si...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Thanks Ben and all experts.
>
> I am almost a newbie to NoSQL world and thus I have a very general
> question how does consumer application of Cassandra/other NoSQL
> technologies deal with atomicity & other factors when there is need to
> normalize data. For example:
>
> Let us say I have requirement for queries
> - find all hotels by name
> - Find all hotels by Point of Interest (POI)
> - Find POI near by a hotel
>
> For these queries I would end up more or less in following tables
> hotels_by_name(hotel_name,hotel_id,city,........) primary key - hotel_name
> hotels_by_poi(poi_name,poi_id,hotel_id,hotel_name,......) primary key -
> poi_name
> poi_by_hotel(hotel_id,poi_name,poi_id,poi_loc,hotel_name,......) primary
> key - hotel_id
>
> So, If I have to add/remove a hotel from/into hotels_by_name , I may need
> to add/remove into/from tables hotels_by_poi/poi_by_hotel. So, here my
> assumption is these operations would need to be atomic( and may be
> supporting other ACID properties) . How these kind of operations/usecases
> being handled in Cassandra/NoSQL world?
>
> Appreciate your response.
>
> Thanks,
> Rajesh
>
>
>
> On Fri, Apr 20, 2018 at 11:07 AM, Ben Slater <ben.sla...@instaclustr.com>
> wrote:
>
>> The second SO answer just says the partitions will be collocated (ie on
>> the same server) not that the two tables will use the same partition. In
>> any event, Cassandra does not have the kind of functionality you are
>> looking for. The closest is logged batch but as Sylvain said, "all that
>> guarantees is that if some operations of a batch are applied, then all
>> of them will
>> *eventually* get applied” and “batch have no rollback whatsoever”.
>>
>> As Cassandra won’t help you here, a potential (although admittedly more
>> complex) option is to do implement compensating transactions at the
>> application level (eg in the catch block delete the records that were
>> inserted). That, however, does not provide you the isolation part of ACID.
>>
>> You also tend to find that if you have properly denormalised your data
>> model for Cassandra there is less requirement for these type of batched
>> updates.
>>
>> Cheers
>> Ben
>>
>> On Fri, 20 Apr 2018 at 15:21 Rajesh Kishore <rajesh10si...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Re-framing my question:
>>>
>>> So, it means that having different tables  will not result into same
>>> partition even though you have same partition key.
>>> Ex.
>>> TableA( Partionkey(id))
>>> TableB( Partionkey(id))
>>> TableC( Partionkey(id))
>>>
>>>
>>> and as part of batch operation I am somehow providing same id say "20"
>>> It wont be considered as Atomic as it will result into different
>>> partition key and there would not be any way to rollback ?
>>> The same is being claimed in https://stackoverflow.com/ques
>>> tions/36700859/does-the-same-partition-key-in-different-
>>> cassandra-tables-add-up-to-cell-theoret
>>>
>>> Now, the other forum says that how we can keep two tables in same
>>> partition
>>> https://stackoverflow.com/questions/34294830/how-to-keep-2-
>>> cassandra-tables-within-same-partition
>>>
>>> Which one is correct ? Please confirm
>>>
>>> Basically , our requirement is - we should be able to achieve similar
>>> functionality as that of JDBC
>>> try {
>>> txn.start()
>>> operation a
>>> operation b
>>>
>>> ......
>>> operation n
>>> txn.commit();
>>> } catch (Exception e)
>>> {
>>>  txn.rollback()
>>> }
>>>
>>> Thanks in advance.
>>>
>>> Regards,
>>> Rajesh
>>>
>>> On Fri, Apr 20, 2018 at 9:38 AM, Rajesh Kishore <rajesh10si...@gmail.com
>>> > wrote:
>>>
>>>> So, it means that having different tables  will not result into same
>>>> partition even though you have same partition key.
>>>> Ex.
>>>> TableA( Partionkey(id))
>>>> TableB( Partionkey(id))
>>>> TableC( Partionkey(id))
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> and as part of batch operation I am somehow providing same id say "20"
>>>> It wont be considered as Atomic as it will result into different
>>>> partition key and there would not be any way to rollback ?
>>>> The same is being claimed in https://stackoverflow.com/ques
>>>> tions/36700859/does-the-same-partition-key-in-different-
>>>> cassandra-tables-add-up-to-cell-theoret
>>>>
>>>> Please confirm
>>>>
>>>> Thanks in advance.
>>>>
>>>> Regards,
>>>> Rajesh
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Thu, Apr 19, 2018 at 3:10 PM, Jacques-Henri Berthemet <
>>>> jacques-henri.berthe...@genesys.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> When using BATCH on multiple tables you’ll need to use a LOGGED
>>>>> batch. When you send the request, it will be written to the batch log of
>>>>> all (relevant) nodes, when this write is successful it will be “
>>>>> accepted” and nodes will try to apply the batch operations. If for
>>>>> any reason a statement fails the node will keep retrying forever. In that
>>>>> case you may see partially applied batch until it’s fixed.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Note that you can’t mix BATCH and LWT on different tables/partitions.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> You can get more details here:
>>>>>
>>>>> http://cassandra.apache.org/doc/latest/cql/dml.html#batch
>>>>>
>>>>> https://inoio.de/blog/2016/01/13/cassandra-to-batch-or-not-to-batch/
>>>>>
>>>>> *--*
>>>>>
>>>>> *Jacques-Henri Berthemet*
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> *From:* Rajesh Kishore [mailto:rajesh10si...@gmail.com]
>>>>> *Sent:* Thursday, April 19, 2018 11:13 AM
>>>>> *To:* user@cassandra.apache.org
>>>>>
>>>>> *Subject:* Re: Does Cassandra supports ACID txn
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks for the response. Let me put my question again wrt a example
>>>>>
>>>>> I want to perform a atomic txn say insert/delete/update on a set of
>>>>> tables
>>>>>
>>>>> TableA
>>>>>
>>>>> TableB
>>>>>
>>>>> TableC
>>>>>
>>>>> When these are performed as batch operations and let us say something
>>>>> goes wrong while doing operation at TableC
>>>>>
>>>>> Would the system rollback the operations done for TableA TableB ?
>>>>>
>>>>> -Rajesh
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Thu, Apr 19, 2018 at 1:25 PM, Jacques-Henri Berthemet <
>>>>> jacques-henri.berthe...@genesys.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> Cassandra support LWT (Lightweight transactions), you may find this
>>>>> doc interesting:
>>>>>
>>>>> https://docs.datastax.com/en/cassandra/3.0/cassandra/dml/dml
>>>>> DataConsistencyTOC.html
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> In any case, LWT or BATCH you won’t have external control on the tx,
>>>>> it’s either done or not done. In case of timeout you won’t have a way
>>>>> to know if it worked or not.
>>>>>
>>>>> There is no way to rollback a statement/batch, the only way is to send
>>>>> an update to modify the partition to its previous state.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Regards,
>>>>>
>>>>> *--*
>>>>>
>>>>> *Jacques-Henri Berthemet*
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> *From:* DuyHai Doan [mailto:doanduy...@gmail.com]
>>>>> *Sent:* Thursday, April 19, 2018 9:10 AM
>>>>> *To:* user <user@cassandra.apache.org>
>>>>> *Subject:* Re: Does Cassandra supports ACID txn
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> No ACID transaction any soon in Cassandra
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Thu, Apr 19, 2018 at 7:35 AM, Rajesh Kishore <
>>>>> rajesh10si...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>
>>>>> I am bit confused by reading different articles, does recent version
>>>>> of Cassandra supports ACID transaction ?
>>>>>
>>>>> I found BATCH command , but not sure if it supports rollback, consider
>>>>> that transaction I am going to perform would be on single partition.
>>>>>
>>>>> Also, what are the limitations if any?
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks,
>>>>>
>>>>> Rajesh
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>> --
>>
>>
>> *Ben Slater*
>>
>> *Chief Product Officer <https://www.instaclustr.com/>*
>>
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